Monday, 9 April 2018

Oil sector: experts disagree over system of blocks contracts awarding

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April 09, 2018

Adnan Adams Mohammed

An oil and gas policy
think tank, Centre for Natural Resources and Environmental Management (CNREM),
has alleged that Ghana lost about US$902.45 million in the oil sector because
some of the oil companies paid less taxes and royalties to the country than
they should have.

According to the Centre, although the oil resource is in Ghana, the county gets
less than 20% of the revenue from the sector.

Speaking further on the issue, the Executive Director of CNREM, Mr Solomon
Kwakumey said his outfit had petitioned the Council of State on the matter.

He added that a meeting was subsequently scheduled where they presented their
argument to the Council and the Petroleum Commission also did a presentation.

“At the meeting…the Petroleum Commission presented a report to the Council of
State that Ghana had got $359 million for the six years of operation.”

He said, after subjecting the Petroleum Commission’s report “to the terms of
the Jubilee Field Agreement, Taxation and Accounting Principle we discovered
that this is how much Ghana was losing which is $902.45. We were able to
calculate how much we lost in royalties and how much we lost regarding taxes.”

However, Alexander Mould,former
Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana National Petroleum Commission (GNPC), has
shot down his claims that Ghana is being shortchanged by multinational
companies working in Ghana’s oil fields.

According to him, the companies have over the years instead put in measures to
favour Ghana.

Meanwhile, Mr Kwakumey said, he has petitioned the government to move from the
hybrid system and adopt the production sharing method to make more money from
Ghana’s oil.

He added that if Ghana were to be practicing the production sharing agreement,
at the end of the 7th year of oil production, the country would have “been
earning over 11 billion dollars as against the under 4 billion dollars that
Ghana has earned for the seven years of operation.”

“The hybrid system is skewed towards the collection of taxes and royalties. It
is very difficult to collect taxes from multinationals. Secondly, under the
hybrid system, we transfer our sovereignty and ownership of the oil to the
foreign oil companies. The hybrid system is just a small modification of
traditional concession…just as the way we have given out gold concessions where
we get only taxes and royalties from the mining companies; it is the same old
thing being applied in the oil sector.”

Mr Kawukume further explained that under the production sharing agreement, it
is the actual output of the oil which is shared between the host nation and the
foreign oil company.

This he said is “because the oil is our sovereign property; under the
production sharing agreement you don’t transfer it to the foreigner, we still
have control over it. So it is only output that is shared and not money.”

He argued that some countries including Nigeria and Libya are making more from
their oil resources because they are practising the production sharing method.

But reacting to
CNREM’s claims, Alex Mould said such arguments are “myopic” because the
multinational companies have to recoup their investments adding that Ghana
would begin making extra from the oil fields after the investments are recouped
by the oil companies.

“That will be a very myopic way of looking at it. You have to remove a few
things from that. You have to remove all the investments and cost of producing
the fuel from that. You have then, after that, look at the taxes that are paid,
we don’t pay the taxes from oil. So that is why I say it is a little more
complicated than what the gentleman has portrayed. So the citizens of Ghana
should rest assured that the government is doing everything possible to
increase the yield for the country.”

“Most of the countries he is talking about, most of the equity has been paid
back. So the investment cost has been paid back, and that is why it seems they
are benefiting by about 75%…These are fields that are either ten years or more
than five years because when you put an investment in, you are allowed to
recoup that investment in the first five years.”

Touching on the Jubilee Field, Mr Mould said about US$5 billion was invested in
it “So that amount would be extracted from the first production in the first
five years and when you finish paying back all the investments then you could
find out that the amount that is going to the State will increase.”

On why Government
still used the hybrid system, Mr Mould said it is more transparent than the
production sharing mode.

“The reason why we used the hybrid system was that we believed that the hybrid
system was more transparent for both the investor and the government. And as
part, they continued using that system and they [multinational oil companies]
have refined it to the benefit of us as the years have gone by.”